My Boy Jack | |
---|---|
Directed by | Brian Kirk |
Written by | David Haig |
Produced by | Michael Casey |
Starring | David Haig Daniel Radcliffe Kim Cattrall Carey Mulligan Julian Wadham |
Cinematography | David Odd, B.S.C. |
Edited by | Tim Murrell |
Music by | Adrian Johnston |
Distributed by | ITV1 (UK) PBS (USA) |
Release date | 11 November 2007 (Remembrance Day) |
Running time | 93 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
My Boy Jack is a 2007 television drama based on David Haig's 1997 play My Boy Jack.[1] It was filmed in August 2007, with Haig as Rudyard Kipling and Daniel Radcliffe as John (Jack) Kipling.[2] It does not include act three of the play, which extended to the 1920s and 1930s. Instead it ends with Kipling reciting the poem My Boy Jack. The American television premiere was on April 20, 2008 on PBS, with primetime rebroadcast on 27 March 2011.[3] The film did well, attracting about 5.7 million viewers on its original broadcast in the UK on Remembrance Day, November 11, 2007.[4]
Exterior scenes for film were shot at Bateman's, the 17th-century house that was Kipling's home from 1902 to his death in 1936, which is now a National Trust property.[5][6]
My Boy Jack is based on the 1997 play by English actor David Haig. It tells the story of Rudyard Kipling and his grief for his son, John, who died in the First World War. The title comes from Kipling's 1915 poem, My Boy Jack.[7]
The theatre piece played at the Theatre Royal, Nottingham, in 2004. It then toured Oxford, Richmond, Brighton, Norwich, Cardiff and Cambridge, with the newly formed Haig Lang Productions. [8] In America, My Boy Jack has been performed under the title My Son Jack.[9]
As the Great War (World War I) begins, 17-year-old Jack Kipling (Radcliffe), the only son of the famous English writer and poet Rudyard Kipling, declares his intention to join the Royal Navy to fight against the Germans. The elder Kipling (Haig), who encourages him in his ambition, arranges several appointments for him to enlist in both the Army and Navy. However, Jack's poor eyesight prevents him from passing the medical examinations, both he and his father are devastated. However, Rudyard uses his influence with the military establishment to eventually secure Jack an officer's commission as a Second Lieutenant in the Irish Guards. Both Jack's mother Carrie (Cattrall), and sister Elsie (Mulligan), disapprove of this post, as they do not wish for him to be deployed to the front line.
Jack, who proves to be a popular officer with his troops, undergoes military training and travels to France within six months. On his 18th birthday, Jack receives orders to lead his platoon into action on the following morning. However, during this attack in the Battle of Loos, Jack is posted missing in action and the Kipling family is informed by telegram.
Over the next three years, Jack's parents track down surviving members from Jack's platoon and interview them. One of Jack's former platoon members eventually confirms that Jack was killed in the Battle of Loos, shot by enemy gunfire, after losing his glasses in the mud during an assault on a German machine-gun post.
Reviews of the film were generally positive. The aggregate Metacritic score was 78/100, with positive reviews from Entertainment Weekly, the Boston Globe, Variety Magazine, the Orlando Sentinel, the New York Post, Hollywood Reporter, the Los Angeles Times, the San Francisco Chronicle and the Chicago Tribune, and with more negative reviews from the Philadelphia Daily News, the The New York Times and the Wall Street Journal.[10] Several reviews took note of Daniel Radcliffe's starring role as Jack.[11][12][13][14] Both Radcliffe and Haig were generally well-received,[15] though Kim Cattrall received mixed reviews for her performance as Jack's mother.[3][14][16][17]